Article originally published by thehill.com
Written by Tobias Burns
“The Federal Reserve Bank announced a 75 basis point interest rate hike on Wednesday, a 50 percent greater increase than the central bank had initially signaled it was going to make for June.
“The move comes after inflation hit a new, 40-year high last week, with consumer prices reaching an 8.6 percent mantel over where they were a year ago.
“Fed watchers predict that the bank’s benchmark federal funds rate will continue to rise throughout the year, perhaps at a quicker pace than originally expected if higher prices don’t go down.
“Even with the rate hike, interest rates will still only be around 1.6 percent, close to all-time lows.
“Here are five ways that an environment of increasing interest rates will affect Americans’ wallets and the economy:
Mortgage, car and credit card payments are going to increase
“The federal funds rate sets the rate at which banks and credit unions can lend money to each other as they determine their need for capital to make investments across the economy.
“Banks that borrow money at the federal funds rate then need to charge a comparable rate to the people and institutions that borrow money from them. So an increase in the funds rate translates down to higher rates in credit markets, mortgage markets and any industry that relies on financing plans to make payments.
“This means higher monthly house and car payments and a bigger price tag on outstanding credit card debt.
“Mortgage rates are already seeing sharp increases. Interest payments for the U.S. benchmark 30-year fixed rate mortgages made the largest one-week jump in 35 years, hitting 5.78 percent as of Thursday, up more than half a percentage point since only the week before.
“That means a mortgage payment on a median-valued $400,000 home, after a 20 percent down payment, would now be about $1,875 dollars. Last year, the monthly payment on the same home would have been $1,335. That’s more than a $500 per month difference.”
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